June 5 - 27, 2021

961 Chung King Road, Los Angeles, CA 90012

Wednesday - Sunday, noon-6PM | or by appointment

more info - laurenpowellart@gmail.com

installation photos: Morgan Waltz - Off Photography

A group show of 37 artists from New York City, reimagining the Still Life.

Ali Miller | Amorelle Jacox | Andrew Jilka | Andy Harman | Anna Cone | Ashley Zelinskie | Autumn Wallace | Avner Chaim | B. Chehayeb | Benjamin Cabral | Chris Pennock | Claire Lachow | Clayton Skidmore | Colin J Radcliffe | Dane Manary | Daniel Morowitz | Eric Lotzer | JD Raenbeau | Keren Anavy | Kristina Schmidt | Lauren Carly Shaw | Madeline Donahue | Margot Bird | Max Heighes | Melanie Delach | Michael Hambouz | Rachel Klinghoffer | Robert Latchman | Ruben Natal-San Miguel | Ryan Michael Ford | Saara Untracht-Oakner | Shayna Strype | Stephen Morrison | Talia Levitt | Tsai-Ling Tseng | Whitney Harris | Yael Nachajon

Just five weeks ago, Lauren Powell packed all her belongings from her Brooklyn apartment into a moving truck alongside still life works from 37 New York-based artists, driving everything across the country to Los Angeles. During the past year of the pandemic many people, including artists and curators, have had to relocate. This tumultuous time has also brought us closer to the objects in our homes and has illuminated the secret lives and agency that they embody. While the term “Still Life '' conjures traditional paintings of lush fruits, exquisite flowers, and memento mori, the works in Moved Still Lives push the concept into new and strange territory, reframing the theme through the inclusion of sculpture and video. Presented together, the exhibition reminds of the surprising conceptualizations of what our possessions can be and have the potential to do.

Several works in the show re-envision the human body as a playful, willful being interacting with surrounding objects. Colin  J. Radcliffe’s sculpture Dick Vase celebrates queer love while cockily transverting the role of a traditional still life object--flowers--with the penis becoming the nurturing support that cradles the blossoms as they grow and eventually wilt. Double Tap by Lauren Carly Shaw, references our relationship to our phones, asking how this period of isolation has affected both our devices and our bodies. Have our phones transformed into more human-like companions as our bodies have atrophied from whole working human forms to anthropomorphic blobs? Shayna Strype and Yael Nachajon's video The Vulva, features a vulva made from everyday materials found at the dollar store. Not only does this piece turn the body into an object of irreverent yet sincere worship, it also gives new life to toys and femme scraps: dinosaur Valentine’s squishy toys, fuzzy socks, ballerina tutus, scrunchies, and koosh balls.

Continuing with the theme of the metamorphosing everyday items, Andy Harman’s Windbreak brings together feather boas, steel rods, rope, tennis balls, a can, and wood in an amalgamation sculpture that removes each individual object from their original contexts resulting in glimpses into new potentialities for the items in our daily surroundings. Looking deeper into the hidden potential of overlooked items, painter Tsai-Ling’s aptly titled Everyday Routine, sheds a vivid light on the banal daily ritual of begrudgingly yet lovingly cleaning up after our pets, while Dane Manary’s photo of fungus blooming out of a smiley bodega bag explores the inherent life and evolution of our trash. 

Many works within the show transform traditional still life subjects, such as fruit, to endow animism and agency. Stephen Morrison's sculptures Banana and Apple Core,  peer out at the viewer, looking simultaneously dignified and amused at their condition as art objects. Max Heighes’ Dumbbell Set sculpture depicts a full dumbbell set consisting of fruit as the weighted objects with cherries at the lowest weight of five pounds and a cluster of grapes topping out at a whopping 27 lbs. The work cheekily mocks the solemnity of masculinity through re-envisioning standard gym equipment into floating fruits, adding whimsy to all that weight. Talia Levitt’s painting Vanitas Torso 2 is simultaneously a self-portrait and a still life using objects such as a pocket and a belt to create a human torso shape. The empty banana peel and whittled apple core beneath the waist line allude to an aging reproductive system and eventual decay of the artist - the cycle of life that encompasses all of us living beings. 

All the works in Moved Still Lives ask us as viewers to consider how we conceive of the commodities in our lives, the various intimacies and intricacies of our relationships to them, and how we have perhaps misjudged or underestimated them. Now, as we begin to venture back into the world, they ask us not to forget them.

-Text by Los Angeles based writer and artist Kate Durbin.

JD Raenbeau | Baby Cake, 2021 | 18 x 14 in. | Watercolor and gouache on paper

Benjamin Cabral | Self Portrait (Still Life as Melting Popsicle), 2021 | 24 x 18 in. (each piece) | (tufted piece) yarn and beads on stretched monks cloth (beaded piece) rhinestones and beads on acrylic painted wood panel

Andrew Jilka | Still Life with Book and Chicken Tenders, 2021 | 30 x 24 in. | Oil on linen

Whitney Harris | Two of cups, 2021 | 14 x 17 in. | Oil pastel on paper mounted on panel

Amorelle Jacox | Dinner for the end, 2021 | 18 x 24 in. | Oil on canvas

Margot Bird | Watermelon Seeds, 2020 | 50 x 50 in. | Acrylic on canvas

Daniel Morowitz | Core Still Life (The Fall), 2021 | 32 x 30 in. | Acrylic on canvas

Max Heiges | Dumbell Set, 2021 | Various weights & sizes (ranging from 5 - 27 lbs.) | Steel and enamel with rubber coating

Stephen Morrison | Banana, 2021 | 9.5 x 7 x 8  in. | epoxy clay, glass, acrylic

Stephen Morrison | Apple, 2021 | 4.5 x 3 in. | epoxy clay, glass, acrylic

Stephen Morrison | Baguette, 2021 | 10 x 3 x 2  in. | epoxy clay, glass, acrylic

Talia Levitt | Vanitas Torso 2, 2021 | 20 x 16 in. | Acrylic on canvas

Andy Harman | Windbreak, 2020 | 6 x 6 x 2 ft. | feather boas, steel rods, rope, tennis balls, can, wood

Saara Untracht-Oakner | Juul Bench, 2020 | 23.5 x 61 x 9 in. | wood, spray paint, plexiglass, resin, LED, battery pack

Tsai-Ling Tseng | Daily Routine, 2021 | 14 x 18 in. | Oil on canvas

Dane Manary | Things Moving 1, 2021 | 12 x 18 in. | Digital print

Dane Manary | Things Moving 2, 2021 | 12 x 18 in. | Digital print

Kristina Schmidt | Turn Left, 2021 | 00:27 seconds | Digital animation

Avner Chaim | Untitled Drawing, 2020 | 14 x 17 in. | Colored pencils on paper

Ryan Michael Ford | Still Life, Bhagavan Krishna, 2021 | 14 x 11 in. | Oil on linen

Autumn Wallace | Discourse Particle (Patron Saint of Invasive Species), 2020 | 19.5 x 15.75 in. | Acrylic, Oil, Pastel and Rhinestones on PVC

Anna Cone | Memento Mori, 2021 | 9 x 10 x 7 in. | mixed media assemblage with hairwork

Ashley Zelinskie | Atropos, 2021 | 16 x 10 x 14 in. | Raw 3D printed nylon, graphite powder, marble

Rachel Klinghoffer | Here comes metal angel, she looks ready to ride, 2021 | 18 x 24 in. | ribbon from gift from parents for son, gem and necklace from daughters costume, daughters broken headband from friend, decorations and friendship bracelet from son's first birthday party that did not happen due sheltering in place, sample from wood stains when renovating house, wrapping paper from gift for daughter from sister, tissue paper from gift from sister, balloon from daughters second birthday party, piece of art from daughter, wood from past sculpture, buttons from grandmothers sewing box, plastic flowers from daughter, tissue paper from gift for son from friend, flashe, acrylic, spray paint, Swarovski crystals, panel

Clayton Skidmore | Bee Graft, 2020 | 34 x 26.25 in. | Watercolor & Gouache on watercolor paper, framed

Chris Pennock | Still Life [WAVLT] #1 with piggyback frame sporting a small alter ego (Crash Panic) and a little Nothing, 2021 | 28 x 15 in. | gesso, acrylic, and gouache on wood and paper in custom wood frame

Michael Hambouz | Superstitious Dance Party 2077, 2021 | 27 x 33 in. | hand-cut paper on panel in custom floating frame

Keren Anavy | West Hampton I & II, 2020 - 2021 | 6 in. diameter drawing | ink and colored pencils on transparent Mylar, plexiglas, shell

Madeline Donahue | Roadside Butts, 2018 | 14 x 11 in. | Oil on canvas

Lauren Carly Shaw | Double Tap, 2021 | 12 x 6 x 12 in. | Polystyrene, flocking, resin, plaster, acrylic nails

Melanie Delach | Day in and day out, everything seemed the same, 2021 | 24 x 18 in. | Mixed media on panel

Ruben Natal-San Miguel | Day #62 of Isolation /Seclusion /Desolation, ''Abstract Life for Abstract Times '' ( Still Life & Alive ), 2020 - Manhattan, NYC. Monday, May 11, 2020. 6:47PM(53 degrees) | 12 x 12 in. | Kodak Endura Metallic Finish Photograph, framed

Ruben Natal-San Miguel | Day #54 of Isolation /Seclusion /Desolation “It is A Wonderful World " (Still Life & Alive ), 2020 - Manhattan, NYC. Sunday, May 3, 2020. 6:15PM(73 degrees) | 12 x 12 in. | Kodak Endura Metallic Finish Photograph, framed

B. Chehayeb | teaching you to care for plants, 2020 | 20 x 16 in. | acrylic on canvas

Robert Latchman | Untitled, 2020 | 14 x 11 in. | Mixed media on paper, framed

Claire Lachow | rosebud (CMYK), 2021 | 4.5 x 6.25 x 4.5 in. | UV print on acrylic sheet, acrylic rod, open edition

Claire Lachow | kerneloops, 2019 | 23 x 23 x 4 in. | Holographic LED fan

Colin J Radcliffe | Dick Vase, 2021 | 3.5L x 4.5W x 8H in. | Porcelain, glaze

Colin J Radcliffe | Dick Vase, 2021 | 3.5L x 4.5W x 11.5H in. | Porcelain, glaze

Colin J Radcliffe | Dick Vase, 2021 | 3.5L x 4.5W x 7H in. | Porcelain, glaze

Colin J Radcliffe | Cum Rag(Baby Blue), 2021 | 11L x 8.5W x 2H in. | Porcelain, glaze

Colin J Radcliffe | You only ever want to see me after midnight, 2019 | 4.5 x 2.75 x .5 in. | Porcelain, glaze

Colin J Radcliffe | Eggplant Emoji Condom, 2021 | 2.5 x 2.5 x 0.25 in. | Porcelain, glaze

Colin J Radcliffe | Ghost U L8R, 2021 | 2.5 x 2.5 x 0.25 in. | Porcelain, glaze

Colin J Radcliffe | Magnum XL(condom), 2021 | 2.5 x 2.5 x 0.25 in. | Porcelain, glaze

Colin J Radcliffe | Break Up Sex Condom, 2021 | 2.5 x 2.5 x 0.25 in. | Porcelain, glaze

Colin J Radcliffe | Mega Big Boy Condom, 2021 | 2.5 x 2.5 x 0.25 in. | Porcelain, glaze

Colin J Radcliffe | Pleasure Plus Condom, 2021 | 2.5 x 2.5 x 0.25 in. | Porcelain, glaze

Eric Lotzer | Glory, 2021 | 10 x 10 in. -framed | graphite on paper

Shayna Strype & Yael Nachajon | The Vulva, 2021 | 02:51 | Single channel video

Ali Miller | Intimacies, 2018 | 60 x 48 in. | Oil on panel

Madeline Donahue | Basement Garden Window, 2021 | 20 x 16 in. | Oil on canvas

Madeline Donahue | Daffodil, 2021 | Assorted sizes approximately 7 x 5 x 5 in. | Glazed ceramic